Part, Dialogue
1 1, 2| nothing can more richly and easily supply the wings than heroic
2 1, 3| however much he may swerve, he easily returns to himself 1 by
3 1, 3| follows that such become more easily and intensely enamoured,
4 1, 3| enamoured, and also more easily and intensely disgusted,
5 1, 3| confirmed. Thus the vicious easily concur in acts of the same
6 1, 4| proceed divinely and "more easily," that is, with greater
7 2, 1| comes to be called more easily delight than sadness, if
8 2, 1| pleasure, vices are more easily engendered. If one aspires
9 2, 1| legend and figure, m may be easily understood, if one considers
10 2, 1| position to incline itself more easily downwards than to force
11 2, 1| and ends. Whence you may easily comprehend the entire significance
12 2, 1| anything better, or more easily taken, comes to sight, At
13 2, 2| have most affinity, can easily demolish the humanities
14 2, 3| of this response is more easily learned where the eyes call
15 2, 3| is. deity itself; and one easily understands Divine love,
16 2, 4| equally so. The sense of it is easily expressed in this sonnet: -- ~
17 2, 5| knowledge of human things, could easily comprehend that it was not
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